Skip to main content

Machine control technology allows more efficient paving

In the US, a specialist contractor is making savings with new 3D technology for concrete paving. US contractor Gehring Construction is a specialist in concrete paving and is a long-time customer of GOMACO. Having bought its first GOMACO unit in 1973, Gehring has a good deal of experience in this segment. The company is now using some of the latest machine control technology, having bought a Topcon Millimetre GPS 3D stringless system, which has been used on a bypass project around the US city of Colombus. T
March 3, 2015 Read time: 4 mins
US contractor Gehring Construction is now making extensive use of 3D paving technology for concrete slipforming on a variety of different projects, from subdivision work to highway paving
In the US, a specialist contractor is making savings with new 3D technology for concrete paving

US contractor 8014 Gehring Construction is a specialist in concrete paving and is a long-time customer of 218 GOMACO.  Having bought its first GOMACO unit in 1973, Gehring has a good deal of experience in this segment. The company is now using some of the latest machine control technology, having bought a 342 Topcon Millimetre GPS 3D stringless system, which has been used on a bypass project around the US city of Colombus.

The company has been using the 3DMC Topcon GPS system on its earthmoving equipment for a number years and because of this, the company was already collecting control points on the bypass project. The company realised that employing the stringless system would eliminate some of the problems associated with stringlines, according to Kevin Gehring, paving superintendent for Gehring Construction.

The company put the Topcon system to the test on a bypass, slipforming a 2.4km, four-lane section of the project. Gehring prepared the grade for the bypass with its GOMACO 9500 trimmer using the 3D system. Then, the company brought in its GOMACO paving train, which included a 9500 concrete placer, a two-track GHP-2800 slipform paver, and a T/C-600 texture/cure machine. The Topcon components used for trimming were fitted on the paver.

“In addition to the added speed and accuracy, another advantage of going with Topcon mmGPS was the fact that both the trimmer and the paver essentially share one single system,” Gehring said. “Once both machines are set up, we can use the system on the trimmer, trim the subgrade and then move it over to the paver. There, after about a five-minute switchover, we can work off the same 3D model, set the offset to reflect the thickness of the pavement and get equally impressive results on the paving.”

The concrete for the new bypass was batched from two Gehring plants, both within around 3.2km of the paving site. The concrete was a standard state of Nebraska mix design with slump averaging around 38mm.

Gehring’s GHP-2800 paver slipformed the new bypass in two 8.5m wide paving passes. A front-mounted centre bar inserter places tie bars every 838mm for the longitudinal joint.

“We have an engineer come on the job site and give us some control points,” Gehring explained. “Then I’ll come in, set up my GPS base station and tie into the control points, make a control file, add that to my surface design, and then I know our elevations will match up with their print.”

He said that the firm has survey points where it sets up the millimetre transmitters every 61m, instead of the 15.2m on a straight run or 7.6m on a curve, which has saved a lot of hubs. Although the hubs are 61m apart, these are close to the slab and the paver so the machine is going past the next hub 30.5m before switching, meaning that the firm is achieving 91.4m from each transmitter. Trimming is different and it is possible to achieve 152.4m from a transmitter in this application.

The firm says that its switch from stringlines to 3D paving has been relatively easy, with just a few points learned along the way, while personnel from GOMACO’s 3D team and Topcon helped with training and offered suggestions. Gehring said, “You have to make sure where you set up your millimetre transmitter is on a surveyed point, so those points need to have good elevations. That way, when you switch to the next one, you don’t see any elevation difference.”

Paving production on the project averaged approximately 762m/day. Behind the paver, a GOMACO T/C-600 texture/cure machine applied a two-pass white spray cure finish and longitudinal tine. With no stringline on the project, a new method of control had to be developed for the texture/cure machine. “That’s another thing we had to get new since there’s no stringline to go off anymore,” Gehring explained. “GOMACO came up with sonic sensors. Steering is referenced off one edge of the slab and grade is referenced on both sides. The sonic sensors bounce the sound beam right off the existing slab and the T/C machine has been following it.”

Gehring Construction started 3D paving hoping that the system would save time and money. “In the three months we were on that job, mmGPS probably helped us knock a couple of weeks off the overall project length,” Gehring added. “There is some saving in not having to go back and correct for high or low spots. However, the real impact comes from not having to stake the job or put up stringline, and the fact all of our Topcon-equipped machines are working off the same base and surface model also improves efficiency and lowers paving costs.”

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • GOMACO’s smart multi-use paver
    January 6, 2017
    GOMACO says that its new 3300 multi-application slipform paver is both smart and versatile. The 3300 features tight steering capabilities with smart leg and track positioning, as well as a smart telescoping mold mounting system that allows paving on the right side or left side. The firm’s GT-3300 has now been re-engineered with the latest technology such as the new version of the G+ control system. GOMACO’s 3300 was specifically designed for right side and left side pour capabilities and features a symmetri
  • New racetrack benefits from new technology
    December 3, 2014
    The use of new technology has helped pave the way for a new US racetrack Saving construction costs and meeting tight tolerances, sophisticated technology has helped deliver a quality racetrack surface within tight time constraints. The National Corvette Museum (NCM) in Bowling Green, Kentucky, lies close to Interstate 65 and now features a brand new racetrack, constructed with the assistance of the latest machine control technologies.
  • Concrete paving key to Berlin's airport runways
    February 17, 2012
    High production concrete paving is proving a key feature at the new Berlin airport facility currently under construction The new Berlin-Brandenburg International Airport will soon provide improved links by air to the city. Work started in mid 2006 with the redevelopment of the existing Berlin Schönefeld Airport.
  • Advances in concrete paving materials
    July 9, 2012
    Innovations in materials technology, as well as machines, could provide a major boost to the concrete paving sector - Mike Woof reports Development of new material technologies for the concrete paving sector continues apace and the latest innovations could provide the biggest boost for this market in many years. High performance cementitious material (HPCM) is an innovative concept that has been developed and tested for road surfacing applications as part of a project in which the UK's Transport Research La